
As we are trying to center our lives in the Gospel, we've had to think through parenting in light of the gospel. In the process, I found a 12-step program to raising a Pharisee (coming from a seminar given by Rev. Carey Hardy), which is kind of a backwards way of thinking about Gospel-centered parenting. If you follow these practices, you will increase the probability of raising a Pharisee, rather than a child who understands the grace of the gospel. Here they are :
1. Majoring on external instead of internal issues.
This is majoring on controlling a child's behavior without using Scripture and prayer to deal with his or her heart. This will produce a Pharisee--everything looks good on the outside, but inwardly he is corrupt (Matthew 23:23-24, 27-28). Don't settle for superficial repentance by your child.
2. Excessive control
This is not balancing discipline with instruction. If you try to control and micromanage everything a child thinks and does, you build accountability only to yourself instead of God. Instead, you want to create a God-consciousness. Don't seek to be the ultimate authority. You must teach them how to think for themselves--how to evaluate. Otherwise, they grow up only knowing how to live by a set of rules and do's and don'ts.
3. Overreacting to failure
This includes not allowing the freedom to fail. It's treating failure as the end of the world. you must see failure as an opportunity for instruction. But many parents live in fear of failure--and thus they become excessive controllers. This may be manifested in calling attention to every mistake. It's a performance-based love that expects perfection.
4. Being unforgiving and impatient.
Instead of a home that is filled with joy, there is an oppressive, negative atmosphere. Sinful choices by your children definitely need to be dealt with. But make sure there is a visible end to the consequences, with the home thus returning to a pleasant atmosphere of peace and tranquility. When you are not getting over their failure, you are teaching how to be unforgiving.
5. Elevating preference over biblical principle.
Some parents are prone to emphasize rules that really don't reflect the Bible at all. Instead, the rules reflect personal preferences. There is nothing inherently wrong with maintaining some rules that flow out of personal preferences. But care must be taken to avoid equating them with biblical commands, or again, allowing them to become excessive. That is what the Pharisees did. If you are enforcing too many of your preferences, or neglecting to teach biblical principles as the child matures, then preferential rule may be perceived as being the same as biblical commands and principles...and they grow up with this pharisaical mindset.
6. Unnecessary separatism
As your children grow, they must be involved with other children; this is a testing ground and provides opportunities for training. There is a balance here -- you have to be discerning about the company your child gets involved with. But some parents go to such an extreme that they won't allow their children to be involved with other children--even Christian children. Children need to be around other kids -- lost kids, spiritual kids, mediocre kids. Separating them will teach them to have a mentality of superiority that is not in line with the gospel. It also keeps them from learning to love others who are not like them.
7. Judging others...other families
This is being judgmental about other families, about things going on in the church; being critical of everything, constantly fault-finding, producing constant criticism. When you do this in front of children, you're developing that judgmental spirit in them.
8. Being "belligerent" -- a fighter
As the child watches you take on every wrong thing in the church, every example of wrong thinking in others, they learn the lifestyle of a fighter. Thus, they end up learning what to fight against and not necessarily what to fight for.
9. Favoritism
Favoritism teaches a child to want to be only with people who are like you and who meet your standards. This leads to the separatism mentioned earlier.
10. No humor
You need to know how to not take yourself so seriously and how to not take things in this world so seriously at times.
11. Building up their self-esteem
A "high self-esteem" is not a biblical concept. Nor is the need to learn to love yourself. Emphasis on self-esteem encourages individuals to become like Pharisees; they are encouraged to delve into self, to be focused on self, to build up self.
12. Lack of genuine spirituality
Living hypocritically teaches hypocrisy. You won't be perfect as a parent, but there must be a level of integrity visible to your children. Hypocrisy can be manifested in a parent who never admits his or her wrong. This gives children a wrong impression of spirituality, and that's a cheap substitute for true spirituality.
